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Big Brother Gets a Brain

Gregus writes "The Village Voice delves into the DARPA's latest plan to track people and vehicle movement in cities, ostensibly for urban warfare, though this would be really handy watching 'suspicious' people in any city. "The goal, according to a recent Pentagon presentation to defense contractors, is to 'track everything that moves.' " The actual DARPA RFP and briefings. I just feel more safe all the time."

3 of 458 comments (clear)

  1. Path of least observation by asmithmd1 · · Score: 4, Informative

    The Institute for Applied Autonomy has a nice tool to plan paths through Manhattan that will take you past the fewest cameras. I imagine these kinds of tools will spring up in other areas

    Or you can get ahead of them like I have. Get a tracking cell phone while it is still optional

  2. Re:Its amazing by Rogerborg · · Score: 4, Informative

    > Well, to be fair, those drugs never have been legal per se, just a bit less criminal.

    Oh dear. Oh dear, oh dear, oh dear. Unquestioning acceptance of the Party line? Plus good.

    Read about the history of drug prohibition. It's come in piecemeal, and it's come because right thinking White Anglo Saxon Protestants want to protect niggers, chinks and spics from their own brutish, unevolved natures. If you think I'm trolling, read the link and read the quotes from eminent US statesmen.

    The history of drug prohibition in the USA is a pretty repugnant one. Get back to me if and when we ever admit that, turn it around and legalize (not decriminalize) any of those drugs so beloved of Uncle Tom and his dusky skinned cohorts. We won't, because we'll always need to have a boogieman under the bed, smoking crack and planning to rape our white virgin daughters.

    --
    If you were blocking sigs, you wouldn't have to read this.
  3. tracking vehicle identity by chimpo13 · · Score: 3, Informative

    They're already starting to track vehicle identity in Australia to give out speeding tickets.

    Camera network set to catch Hume speedsters

    The main paragraphs since no one on slashdot reads the articles are:

    Ten cameras to be installed along the Hume Freeway soon will measure the average speed of cars over the entire 300-kilometre journey between Melbourne's northern fringe and Wodonga.

    Drivers whose overall progress is faster than the speed limit allows will be fined. Drivers will also be caught if they are speeding as they pass a camera.

    The company said yesterday the cameras combined digital imaging and optical character recognition to read vehicle number plates. The cameras would be networked and synchronised.